• Hi Matt,

    Looks like i might have made a bit of a mistake with the iron being about 10-15 degrees too hot and trying to be thorough pushing out air bubbles – leading to me applying too much heat and damaging the TPU later on the underside of the floor.

    What would you recommend doing to ammend? Will aquaseal be enough, or should I be ironing a…[Read more]

  • Seat

    Figured I’d show it more or less rigged up now. I made a seat back out of some closed cell foam and a couple scraps of fabric. I used a piece of two sided so that I could weld a baffle in the middle, but someone with half a brain and a sewing kit could probably do a better job of it. I figured I’d share though because I thought that if…[Read more]

  • Post your packrafting-related items for sale here (e.g. packrafts, PFDs, paddles, drysuits, helmets, backpacks, etc.).

    If you are posting a DIY Packraft kit for sale, indicate the model, color, size, whether or not it includes an airtight zipper, date of purchase, how much work has been done, whether or not anything is missing, and if you are…[Read more]

  • Beauty!

  • Well, off to find leaks! I’m at roughly 2-3 breaths every couple hours, but would like to make it a bit tighter!

    The front end is a little botched (turns out I misread your instructions; I think you said 10-12 inches from the end of the boat/tip of the boat when ironing the center seams and I did 10 inches from the end of the seam. It was too…[Read more]

  • Kavy became a registered member 4 years, 2 months ago

  • Thanks for posting this, Layla! It looks really good!

  • I made a drybag for my ukulele with leftover fabric! Making stuff is so fun! Thanks Matt for all your designing and videos that taught me how to do this!

  • I have just finished editing a “highlights” video from the 30-day solo packrafting/hiking trip I did this past summer, so if you’re interested in seeing what that trip was like, please check it out.

    I’m also […]

    • Fantastic! I was inspired by other people, so I hope my journey inspires others too!

      • What a great video. You skills at “seeing” the right thing to shoot are second to none. I love the close up shots of the moss, spider webs, ferns, pine boughs and the way you capture the light coming through the trees,. The panoramic vistas are breathtaking. Your “little planet” panorama of you traversing the rocky crag was scary and evoked my fear for you at that point. You did a lot of hiking carrying the camera pole! Great job! Great trip!

    • Haha, that is wonderful! Thanks 😀

    • Dear Matt,
      I’m deeply impressed by your trip – what an adventure! And your documentation is awesome, and very useful too. I admire the (huge amount) of work you’ve invested to make your dream become a reality, and to show us how beautiful it is out there in the nature. I really hope that some more people will be inspired to leave their comfort zone, and to go out and to see this by themselves. Life can be so beautiful. All the best to all of you, and kind regards
      Ruedi from Oeko-Travel Org and Biber-Boote in Switzerland

    • Amazing! Loved it!
      I was confused as to why that woman told you you couldn’t enter the lake via the river. If you stayed either on the river or below flood line of the river banks you have full right to do so (Canadian Navigable Act).

      I have a similar tent (zpacks) – 3 person version though (2 dogs and a wife requires more space). Might get the 2 person as we sometimes travel separately.

      I have a gossamer gear backpack instead of the zpacks backpack which is super comfy and only a tiny bit heavier.

      I think I’ll work out some smaller loops to hike/paddle or bike/paddle out of your bigger adventure.

      Matt are you still living on the island or are you in Smithers like your business says? Love the island. I’ve tried to get to Smithers 3 times and failed (long story) but one day – good backcountry skiing and mtn biking there! Always looking for new places to play.

      Thanx again for sharing your adventure!

      • Thanks! I do indeed live in Smithers!

        That river is probably one of just a few in Canada where that law doesn’t apply – the river is part of a First Nations treaty settlement area, and in the treaty’s fine print it does clearly say that the river is included in the private property. I wasn’t aware of it beforehand (it’s not marked on any of the maps I have), but I did confirm it afterwards. If someone was planning to do a similar route, I would recommend seeking permission in advance, or simply going straight from Alberni Inlet to Nahmint Lake via the Nahmint River valley to bypass that area entirely. There’s a big log jam in the Henderson River anyway, so it’s not an attractive route.

    • Matt how did you like paddling the Nimkish River? I lived in Port McNeil for a year (many many moons ago) and it was one of my earlier rivers I explored. The upper part was easy but there was one tiny tiny canyon that had an interesting needle drop but at flood level was actually was nasty. The lower part as it comes into Woss has a cool waterfall to drop at lower water and during flood a weird wave. I know you didn’t paddle the lower part as you described you got out before hand but did you do the tiny canyon? How was the run down to where you got out? Also how did you enter the Nimkish – we used another feeder creek as I recall. I’m asking because you had gear with you in a pack raft so I’m curious to how you found the run.

      • Loved it! It’s a beautiful river. I paddled in from Vernon Lake via the Sebelhall River, which was nice, aside from the log jams. There’s a bridge over the Sebelhall, so maybe that’s where you started too. I did paddle a beautiful little canyon lower down, but walked around the boulders/ledge leading into it because with the low water level it looked a bit too sharp. I had to walk several short sections of the river where it widened out over gravel bars because of the low water level – August probably isn’t the best month to paddle the Nimpkish (bit it’s still mostly doable). I’m working on some more videos that will show more detail.

    • OK I goofed. I looked on google maps and have things upside down. I’ve paddled two sections of the Nimkish – the part below Woss via Woss River into Nimkish (that was the easy section). The part above and into Woss we entered via Davie River which, combined with the waterfalls made for a more advanced paddle.

      So did you paddled the part after Woss? You finish at Nimkish lake but I use to climb up a ridiculously steep bank way up to a bridge on the fsr to avoid the flat paddle of the lake.

      I’m intrigue though with the upper Nimkish now. Likely would be fine with a bike on a packraft for the most part to do all of the Nimkish river (skipping the falls for certain). I’ll have to read back on your trip and see what else I could add to make an interesting bike raft trip loop.

      Sorry for getting my info mixed up.

      • Yep, I paddled below Woss as well (you can see my entry and exit points on the maps on write-up page). There’s almost no traffic on the roads parallel to the river, so any loop in the area would be good for bikerafting.

    • Nice and inspiring! It also make mi curious about what kind of cameragear you use on your trips? I would also be interested to know what kins of riggs other pacraftbuilders use for mounting cameras when you are not shooting with a drone. Would it be a thing to have in mind before starting to assemble a diy-pacraft?

      • Thanks! I used a 360 camera on the end of my trekking pole to film the paddling – no drone or other rigging required. For more information, there’s a link to a complete gear list (including camera gear) in the post above.

    • I didn’t change anything, I just weighed it without the seat.

  • Great job, and thanks for posting!

    To answer your question about the potential benefit of sewing the seams, I have done lots of destructive testing on the tube-to-tube seams used in the DIY Packrafts and the fabric around the weld always fails before the weld does – in other words the ironed seams are stronger than the fabric tubes – so while…[Read more]

  • Skeena maiden voyage yesterday on Bronte Creek, ON. The boat performed very well. This was my first diy packraft and I thought I’d post some thoughts whilst it’s still fresh.

    First off, I’d like to say thanks to Matt for making all of this possible. What a blast. The boats are well engineered, the instructions are clear and there’s a great…[Read more]

  • AbMtnGuy posted an update 4 years, 2 months ago

    Wondering what to do with those smaller packraft fabric scraps? Turn them into gifts for your cycling friends.
    It’s #wastereductionweek in Canada. Here’s a simple project to create a hidden handlebar roll by up-cycling packraft fabric scraps and a bar-end plug. Further details at https://bikepackersfoundry.com/hidden-handlebar-roll/

  • Thanks for the replies and info. I did download Rhino 360 and I’m going to play around with some different ideas. I have no idea how construct longitudinal seams that are as strong as radial ones, but several of the European packrafts seem to use them in whitewater versions, so I’m interested in learning more.

     

     

  • Hi, just bought myself an Ultralight Raft! Looking forward to seeing it shipped and getting started on it!

  • Okay, great! I’ve brushed off any debris, including the remnants of Tyvek tape, Exposed the 4 corner seams, 2L-1L, 2R-1R, 3L-4L,3R-4R, and applied pretty liberal amounts of seam grip over and around the seam strip bubbles. Assuming that’s successful, tomorrow I’ll do the same on 1L-1R and 4L-4R and hopefully have a working boat!

  • Hi Aaron, I’m interested in what tools people are using as well, but I have some info to add as well.

    I don’t think flat seams (sometimes called pinch seams) like in the examples you provided are as strong as the lap seams like in a typical packraft. The pressure is more directly trying to tear the seam apart. Here is a youtube video about seams…[Read more]

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